ESPN is making more money than ever off of subscribers despite its dwindling subscriber base

ESPN is losing subscribers, but they are not losing money. In fact, ESPN is making more money off subscribers than ever before, despite their dwindling numbers.

In 2011, ESPN peaked when they topped 100 million subscribers. However, in the six years since then, their numbers have fallen, losing nearly 13 million subscribers.

It needs to be clear that there is a difference between subscribers and viewers. Nearly 90 million people subscribe to cable or satellite packages that contain ESPN. Despite the losses, demand for ESPN appears to be as strong as ever as ESPN's subscriber fees continue to rise. That is the amount cable and satellite providers pay to ESPN per subscriber in order to provide ESPN to its customers.ESPN now charges $7.21 per subscriber, by far the most expensive cable network. That isup 54% from what they were charging in 2011 and has shown no sign of slowing down.

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Because the subscriber fee is growing at a faster rate than the rate of losing of subscribers, ESPN's subscriber revenue is actually still climbing. That growth has slowed, but that is a far cry from actually losing money.

As Dan Le Batard recently noted, "ESPN is not losing money... The difference between making a grotesque amount of money and then making a slightly less grotesque amount of money is not the same as failing."

.@LeBatardShow with a great quote and a point that many critics fail to grasp: "ESPN is not losing money... The difference between making a grotesque amount of money and then making a slightly less grotesque amount of money is not the same as failing." pic.twitter.com/8ZarJDirGc